"Ways of reading panopticism ninth edition" Essays and Research Papers

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    Foucault Panopticism

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    a French philosopher explores several elements in the ways in which our humanity and social sciences work. In his work‚ Discipline and Punishment: The Birth of the Prison he uses Jeremy Bentham’s design for a panoptic prison in which prisoners are watched constantly to explore how observation can change an individual’s behavior. Similarly Foucault believed‚ observation works as a disciplinary tool that forces individuals to act a certain way under constant surveillance‚ creating permanent effects

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    Foucault Panopticism

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    The Powers of Panopticism Michel Foucault seeks throughout his work‚ Panopticism‚ to analyze how contemporary society is differently structured from the society that preceded us. He displays‚ through Jeremy Bentham’s architectural realization of the Panopticon‚ a prison for society and those who inhabit it. Also‚ there is the matter of constant surveillance‚ discipline and power in society. The Panopticon is not only a building where people are being governed‚ but also a laboratory-- “The Panopticon

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    Foucault's Panopticism

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    Panopticism meaning a certain view point from an all seeing eye seems to be the way we as a people‚ although we may not know it are being seen. Within every building‚ social class‚ or individual there is a certain type of behavior permitted and if that behavior is not met with what is “right” there is discipline to be handed out. Maybe the world as we know it is under one big microscope and every moment of a regular citizens life is carefully observed by a greater power than themselves. Author Michel

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    Foucault's Panopticism

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    The Panopticism was certainly difficult to read and comprehend. After reading it for the first time‚ I did not understand it. After reading and skimming a couple times‚ I began to increase my understanding. But after all of that I still do not fully understand the Panopticism. Foucault has a theory about society‚ comparing jails‚ schools‚ and factories‚ because we are constantly being observed. Foucault’s persona in literature does influence the difficulty of the reading. Some of the vocabulary

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    acknowledge them back. Michel Foucault mentions in his essay entitled “Panopticism” that there is a common resemblance to this 17th century structure‚ to many different‚ but common spaces in today’s society. Although some may say there is no way we live with the in-depth surveillance a panopticon had‚ but when comparing the panopticon structures to today’s typical‚ everyday routines‚ one may begin to acknowledge there is a less noticeable way of being watched. For instance‚ a classroom is a reoccurring‚ modern

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    Who Possesses Agency? Michel Foucault’s work in which he titled Panopticism‚ he explains his views on power; how it is operated‚ obtained and sustained. He based the word panopticism on Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon - an architectural design of a building that enables the one who possesses agency to see each cell that a subject of power is incarcerated to. Foucault writes that “Visibility is a trap” (Foucault‚ 286) because the tower is used to “induce in the inmate a state of conscious and permanent

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    even something paranormal‚ everybody gets that unsubtle feeling that something bad is going to happen to them. In Michel Foucault’s essay‚ Panopticism‚ Foucault makes the claim that no matter where you turn‚ someone or something may be watching you. By doing this‚ Foucault also makes the claim that this would be the only way to keep society in tact. Now panopticism is not an actual building with guards watching over society‚ but it’s a diagram of hierarchy reduced to fit today’s society. Foucault explains

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    that the beautiful totality of the individual is amputated‚ repressed‚ altered by our social order‚ it is rather that the individual is carefully fabricated in it‚ according to a whole technique of forces and bodies." (240‚ Foucault)In the essay‚ Panopticism‚ by Michel Foucault‚ he makes the argument that we live in a society of "surveillance". It is mainly this surveillance that forms the basis of authority that draws the individual to believe that the world he lives in is one that is continually watching

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    Panopticism Synopsis

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    Panopticism” Synopsis (beginning to 301)   The Plague Foucault starts off his essay with the plague and the measures taken by a town to prevent it from affecting more people. People have been ordered to stay inside. Every street has been under surveillance and authority to make sure no one leaves their home or else the penalty will be death. There are no specific names or history of the people except for the roles that they play and what they do. For example‚ the town was divided into distinct

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    The proctors’ job is perhaps the most important element in what allows this space to function as a panopticon without the architectural qualities of one. Panopticism works when authority is perceived to possibly be watching at any given moment by ‘the inmates’ but ‘the inmates’ cannot verify whether or not the authorities actually are watching. Because of the combinatory factors of the proctors’ watching the students‚ and the students – as a rule – not being able to watch the proctors (because they

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